Skidmore College will be a smoke-free and tobacco-free campus, effective Jan. 1, 2019. Smoking and tobacco use — as well as the use of all e-cigarettes and vaping devices — will be prohibited throughout all Skidmore College property, including outdoor areas.

The Skidmore College community has again joined together to collect more than $13,000, 4,000 food items and over 1,000 school supplies and personal care items to support nonprofit organizations through the Skidmore Cares community service program.

2019 Faculty

FICTION

Elizabeth Benedict is the author of Almost, a novel described by Edmund White as “a fast-paced, funny, and splendidly intelligent
drama [with] a varied, unforgettable cast of characters.” Her earlier books include
Slow Dancing (a finalist for the National Book Award), The Beginner’s Book of Dreams, Safe Conduct, and The Joy of Writing Sex (“Read it because it will teach you everything you need to know about writing good
fiction,’’ suggests Peter Carey). Benedict has taught at Princeton University, Swarthmore
College, and the Iowa Writers Workshop. Her latest novel is The Practice of Deceit.

Adam Braver is author of several historical novels including DivineSarah, Mr. Lincoln’s Wars and Crows Over The Wheatfield. (“Brilliant and inventive work,” wrote a reviewer for the Los Angeles TimesBook Review. “A novelist whose works are richly imagined,” says the Washington Post.) Braver’s most recent novels are 1963, which revolves around the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and Misfit. (“Amazing...a book about identity, privacy and intimacy that both exposes and conceals
its subject – Marilyn Monroe,” writes Ann Beattie).

Cristina Garciais the author of six novels. Her first novel, Dreaming in Cuban (1992), was a finalist for The National Book Award and inspired a reviewer in The Nation to write: “Her work is renewing American fiction.” Of her later novels, Edwidge Danticat wrote:
“Cristina Garcia enchants us with lyricism and humor and political engagement.” Of
her most recent novel, King Of Cuba (2013), the New York Times reviewer wrote: “Garcia has allowed herself to love her despot as much as she loves
his enemy… [The novel] is a gift Garcia has given to the country of her birth—and
to us.” Garcia was born in Cuba and was for some years the TIME magazine Bureau Chief in Miami before becoming a full-time novelist. She has won
the Kafka Award, Guggenheim and Hodder Fellowships and other prizes. She was a student
at the New York State Summer Writers Institute in 1990.

Garth Greenwell is an American poet, author, literary critic, and educator. His debut novel, What Belongs to You, has been called the “first great novel of 2016” by Publishers Weekly. James Wood wrote of this book in The New Yorker that it is “a work of originality and power,” “consummate in its mastery of pacing,”
and with “a rare delicacy.” The reviewer for The NY Times wrote of it as “a masterly debut novel” and “an instant classic…on a gay man’s endeavor
to fathom his own heart.” Edmund White describes the novel as “simply a masterpiece.”
In 2013, Greenwell returned to the United States after living in Bulgaria to attend
the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop as an Arts Fellow. He has published stories
in The Paris Review and APublic Space and writes criticism for The New Yorker and The Atlantic. Greenwell studied at the Eastman School of Music and received a BA in Literature
with a minor in Lesbian and Gay Studies from the State University of New York at Purchase
in 2001, where he received the 2000 Grolier Poetry Prize. He received his MFA from
Washington University in St. Louis, and an MA in English and American Literature from
Harvard University. He has taught at several programs in this country and in Europe.
Greenwell’s first novella, Mitko, won the Miami University Press Novella Prize and was a finalist for the Edmund White
Debut Fiction Award as well as the Lambda Award. His work has appeared in Yale Review, Boston Review, Salmagundi, MichiganQuarterly Review, and Poetry International, among others.

James Hannaham is the author of the novels Delicious Foods (Little, Brown 2015), a New York Times and Washington Post Notable Book of 2015 and winner of the 2016 PEN/Faulkner Award, Hurston/Wright Legacy
Award, and Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters,
and God Says No (McSweeney’s 2009), a finalist for the Green Carnation Prize and an American Library
Association Honoree. He has published stories in One Story, Fence, Story Quarterly, and BOMB, and one in Gigantic for which he won a Pushcart Prize. As a conceptual artist, he has exhibited at The
Center for Emerging Visual Artists, 490 Atlantic Gallery, Kimberly-Klark Gallery,
and James Cohan. Once upon a time, he wrote arts criticism for the Village Voice and co-founded the performance group Elevator Repair Service. Now he only writes
arts criticism for the online journal 4Columns and performs in very limited capacities. He teaches in the Department of Writing
at the Pratt Institute.

Paul Hardingwon the Pulitzer Prize for his debut novel Tinkers in 2010, and his recent 2013 novel Enon has inspired comparable praise. In the New York Times Mark Slouka wrote: “One might have to go as far back as Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping to find a first novel that declared itself with such authority. Harding’s associative
flights—his twisting, turning lyricism—were stunning, his ability to stress the physical
world into extended metaphor downright Melvillean…In Enon, Harding’s gifts are again everywhere on display.” Tinkers also won the PEN Bingham Prize, and inspired the following citation: “An exquisite
novel, at once fresh and hauntingly familiar, simple and profound.” More recently,
the New Yorker reviewer said of Enon: “An extraordinary follow-up to Tinkers…a darkly intoxicating read.” Harding was a student at the New York State Summer Writers
Institute and received an MFA from Iowa. In recent years he has taught at Harvard
University and in the MFA program at Iowa.

Adam Haslett is a graduate of Swarthmore College (B.A., 1992), the University of Iowa (M.F.A.,
1999), and Yale Law School (J.D., 2003). He has been a visiting professor at the Iowa
Writers’ Workshop and Columbia University. His first book, a collection of short stories
entitled You Are Not a Stranger Here, was released in 2002 and was a finalist for the 2002 National Book Award and the
2003 Pulitzer Prize and spent some time on The New York TimesBest Seller List. It won the PEN/ Malamud Award for the best book of short fiction in 2002. It was
also named one of the five best books of the year by Time. Haslett has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Rockefeller
Foundation, and the Fine Arts Work Center. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, Esquire, The Nation, The Atlantic, and The Best American Short Stories, as well as National Public Radio’s Selected Shorts. His first novel, UnionAtlantic, was released in February 2010. It has been translated into twelve languages and
won a Lambda Literary Award for best work of gay men’s fiction published in 2010.
Haslett’s most recent novel, Imagine Me Gone, was published in 2016. Reviewers have the following to say of Haslett’s fiction:
“Adam Haslett may be our F. Scott Fitzgerald.” (Washington Post Book World) “Union Atlantic is the first great novel of the new century that takes the new century as its subject.”
(ESQUIRE) “Imagine Me Gone offers a full and luminous depiction of the mind under siege” in a book “refreshingly
replete with surprise, with a dark and winning humor and sentences so astute that
they lift the spirit even when they’re awfully sad.” (The NYTimes Book Review) “Haslett is a major talent. It’s been years since a novel has captured the zeitgeist
of contemporary America this well.” (Bookslut)

Amy Hempel is the author of several acclaimed volumes of short fiction, including Reasons To Live, At The Gates of the AnimalKingdom, Tumble Home, The Dog of the Marriage, and TheCollected Stories of Amy Hempel, the last of which was described in the Village Voice as “the literary event of the year.” The AtlanticMonthly noted that “few fiction writers are as intensely admired by her peers,” while a reviewer
for the Chicago Tribune described her “word by word virtuosity” as “off the charts.” In his “Introduction”
to Hempel’s Collected Stories Rick Moody speaks of her “bladelike” prose and her “besieged
consciousness.” Until recently she directed the creative writing program at Brooklyn
College and taught for several years at Harvard.

Dana Johnson is the author of the short story collection In the Not Quite Dark. She is also the author of Break Any Woman Down, winner of the Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction, and the novel Elsewhere, California. Both books were nominees for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award. Her work has appeared
in Zyzzyva, The Paris Review, Callaloo,The Iowa Reviewand Huizache, among others, and anthologized in Watchlist: 32 Stories by Persons of Interest, Shaking the Tree: A Collection of New Fiction and Memoir by Black Women, and California Uncovered: Stories for the 21st Century. Her fiction received a Notable from Best American Short Stories 2018. Born and raised
in and around Los Angeles, she is a professor of English at the University of Southern
California where she serves as director of the PhD in Creative Writing and Literature
Program.

Claire Messud is the author of several award-winning and best-selling novels, including The Emperor’s Children, The Woman Upstairs, The last Life, When The World Was Steady, and The Burning Girl. Messud teaches at Harvard and is widely regarded as one of the premier writers in
the country. The NY TIMES: “A literary writer both brainy and deep.” She writes frequently
for The NYReview of Books, The New Yorker and other magazines. In 2015 she won the Strauss Living Award from the American Academy
of Arts and Letters.

Rick Moody is author of several novels including The Ice Storm,Purple America, and Garden State. He has also written two acclaimed volumes of short fiction, Demonology and The Ring of BrightestAngels Around Heaven. Newsday describes him as “our anthropologist of desolate landscapes,” John Hawkes as “a writer
of meticulous originality.” He received the Academy of Arts and Letters Addison Metcalf
Award. His memoir is The Black Veil (“Moody’s writing rants and raves and roars,” writes a reviewer for The NewYork Times. “He is an unrepressed quester after meaning,” writes Robert Boyers). Moody’s latest
novels are The Diviners (2005) and The Four Fingers of Death (2010), and his latest collection of short fiction is Right Livelihoods (2007). “One of our best writers,” said a reviewer for the Washington Post. Moody’s acclaimed recent novel is Hotels Of North America (2016).

Joanna Scott won a MacArthur “Genius” Award when she was 31 years old, and has also won many
other awards, from a Lannan Foundation Prize to a Guggenheim Fellowship and membership
in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is the author of many books, including
the novels Follow Me, Tourmaline, Make Believe,The Manikin, Liberation and others. She is also the author of two volumes of short stories entitled Various Antidotes and EverybodyLoves Somebody, and won the Aga Khan Prize for short fiction from the Paris Review. “An elegant, completely spellbinding writer,” says the Washington Post. “One of the really important contemporary voices,” writes Rick Moody…..” vital,
passionate fiction about how we live our lives.” Scott is the Burrows Professor at
The University of Rochester and has taught at the New York State Summer Writers Institute
in ten previous summers.

NON-FICTION

Phillip Lopate is a central figure in the recent revival of interest in memoir writing and what has
come to be called “the personal essay.” Lopate is the author of Portrait of My Body, Confessions of Summer,Against Joie de Vivre, The Rug Merchant, Being with Children, and Totally Tenderly Tragically. He is also the editor of The Art of thePersonal Essay and was the series editor of The Anchor Essay Annual. Lopate’s work has been included in The Best American Essays and The Pushcart Prize Series. His most recent books are To Show and Tell,Portrait Inside My Head, Waterfront, Getting Personal: SelectedWritings and Notes On Sontag. In 2008 he published a volume of fiction entitled Two Marriages. He directs the non-fiction MFA program at Columbia University. “He is our Montaigne,”
writes Robert Boyers.

James Miller is the author of a controversial book about rock and roll, Flowers in the Dustbin (Simon & Schuster). His earlier books include two titles nominated for the National
Book Critics Circle Award: Democracy Is in the Streets (1987), a study of the American student left in the 1960s, and The Passion of Michel Foucault (1993), a critical biography of the contemporary French thinker. Director of the graduate
program in liberal studies at the New School, and, until recently, editor of Daedalus (the magazine of the American Academy of Arts & Letters), Miller writes often for
such publications as TheNew York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the New Republic. He has also written extensively about popular culture, reviewing for Rolling Stone and, for 12 years, serving as book and music critic for Newsweek. Of Miller’s best-selling book Democracy Is in the Streets, critics wrote, “brings the sixties alive in its passion, in its idealism, in its
follies” (Ronald Steel); and “an outstanding work” (Hendrick Hertzberg). His latest
book, entitled Examined Lives, received a rave review on the front page of The New York Times Book Review.

POETRY

Peg Boyers is the author of three volumes of poems, all published by the University of Chicago
Press. The first, Hard Bread (2002), was described by Richard Howard as “the most original debut in my experience
of contemporary American poetry.” With poems spoken in the invented voice of the late
Italian writer Natalia Ginzburg, the book, says Robert Pinsky, “not only surpasses
the notion of a merely good first book” but “soars beyond the conventional expectations
of ‘persona’ and dramatic monologue.” “The creation of the voice in this book,” wrote
Frank Bidart, “stoic, passionate, resigned, insistent on truth—is a brilliant achievement.”
Boyers’ second book, HoneyWith Tobacco (2007), “has a rare power,” wrote George Steiner; “a beautiful book,” wrote Henri
Cole. Peg Boyers is executive editor of the quarterly Salmagundi and teaches creative writing at Skidmore College. Her latest book, entitled To Forget Venice, came out in October of 2014 and was hailed for its “disarming flights of imagination”
and “inspired ventriloquism.”

Henri Cole is the author of seven books of poems, including The Look of Things, The Marble Queen, The Visible Man and MiddleEarth. (“Henri Cole has become a master poet, with few peers,” writes Harold Bloom. “Middle Earth is [his] epiphany, his Whitmanesque sunrise… [These] are the poems of our climate.”)
Of his earlier books, Wayne Koestenbaum wrote in the New Yorker: “a poet not content to remain in the realm of the merely lapidary, the self-consciously
coloratura…he produces lines of natural and nonchalant brio…in stanzas as shapely
as topiary…; he can write about the soul stumbling against quotidian impediments…
[approaching] a variety of subjects, from first love… to family history.” Cole has
taught at the Summer Writers Institute since 2004. His most recent books are Blackbird & Wolf and Pierce The Skin, a volume of Selected Poems: 1982-2007.

Campbell McGrath teaches creative writing at Florida International University and has taught at the
Summer Writers Institute since 2007. The winner of a MacArthur “Genius” Award, he
is the author of many books of poetry, including American Noise,Pax Atomica, Spring Comes To Chicago, Seven Notebooks, FloridaPoems and Capitalism. “A poet of formal eloquence and rhetorical power,” writes the reviewer for Publishers Weekly, “of vision and engagement….he descends into the maelstrom of American culture and
emerges singing.” “He is our Whitman,” writes the reviewer for American Review. McGrath’s latest book XX: Poems For The 20thCentury has been celebrated as a “tour de force” and “an improbable feat of the imagination.”

Gregory Pardlo's ​collection​ Digest (Four Way Books) won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. His other honors​ include
fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and
the New York Foundation for the Arts; his first collection Totem was selected by Brenda Hillman for the APR/Honickman Prize in 2007. He is Poetry
Editor of Virginia Quarterly Review and currently teaches in the graduate writing program at Rutgers-Camden University. Air Traffic, a memoir in essays, was released by Knopf in April.

Vijay Seshadri is a Brooklyn, New York–based Pulitzer Prize–winning poet who won the 2014 Pulitzer
in poetry for Three Sections. He has been an editor at The New Yorker, and for many years a professor and chair in the undergraduate writing and MFA program
at Sarah Lawrence College. Seshadri’s poem The Disappearances came to prominence after the The New Yorker published it on their back cover following the September 11 attacks in 2001. The NewYorker poetry editor, Alice Quinn, said that the poem “...summoned up, with acute poignance,
a typical American household and scene...The combination of epic sweep (including
the quoted allusion to one of Emily Dickinson’s Civil War masterpieces, from 1862) and piercing, evocative detail is characteristic of the contribution
Seshadri has made to the American canon.” Author of several volumes of poems, Seshadri
has been praised for the “electric energy and gravitas” of his work by Frank Bidart,
and for his “musicality and wit” by Eavan Boland. Campbell McGrath has written that
Seshadri is “grave and witty, classical and contemporary, casually brilliant….a writer
of subtle, elastic and brilliant intelligence.”

Rosanna Warren has won the Lamont Poetry Prize and many other awards for her poetry. She is the
author of five books of poems, including Departure, Stained Glass, Each Leaf Shines Separate and Ghost In A Red Hat. Harold Bloom writes: “Warren is an important poet, beyond the achievement of all
but a handful of living American poets.” And Charles Simic writes in The NY Review of Books: “Her work has become stronger and stronger… The new book explores intimacy and separation
in poems of difficult love….masterful and ambitious.” Until recently Rosanna Warren
was University Professor at Boston University and is now a Professor in the Committee
on Social Thought at University of Chicago.

WRITERS-IN-RESIDENCE

MARY GAITSKILL is our “distinguished 2019 Writer-in-Residence,” who will be with the program spanning
a part of sessions one and two, appearing in events organized around fiction and creative
non-fiction. Gaitskill is the author of many books, including Bad Behavior, Veronica, Don’t Cry, The Mare and With A Little Hammer.

Amy Wallen is the author of the memoir When We Were Ghouls: A Memoir in Ghost Stories (“A perfect balance of dark and light forces in this memory palace.”—Phillip Lopate)
and the novel Moon Pies and Movie Stars (“a delightful and exhilarating journey, kind of like being on a tour bus guided by
Eudora Welty on speed,” writes Mary Gordon). Her essays have been published in The Gettysburg Review, The Normal School, Country Living, The Writers’ Chronicle and other national magazines. Amy teaches creative writing at the University of California
at San Diego and is Associate Director of the New York State Summer Writers Institute.

Helen Klein Ross is a poet and novelist whose work has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times and literary journals. Her novel What Was Mine was published by Simon & Schuster in 2016 and praised by Claire Messud as a work of
“compelling lucidity and vivid precision.” Helen is at work on her next novel, forthcoming
from Little, Brown in 2018. She is the creator and editor of The Traveler’sVade Mecum published last year by Red Hen Press, a compendium of new poems titled by old telegrams
sourced from an 1853 book she discovered on Twitter. Contributors include Frank Bidart
and veterans of his New York State Summer Writers workshop.

Summer Writers Institute Contact

PHONE

518-580-5593

FAX

518-580-5548

MAIL

NYS Summer Writers InstituteOffice of the Dean of Special ProgramsSkidmore College 815 North Broadway Saratoga Springs, NY 12866